US20020087338A1 - Method and apparatus for verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure - Google Patents
Method and apparatus for verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure Download PDFInfo
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- US20020087338A1 US20020087338A1 US09/752,198 US75219800A US2002087338A1 US 20020087338 A1 US20020087338 A1 US 20020087338A1 US 75219800 A US75219800 A US 75219800A US 2002087338 A1 US2002087338 A1 US 2002087338A1
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- package
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- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07B—TICKET-ISSUING APPARATUS; FARE-REGISTERING APPARATUS; FRANKING APPARATUS
- G07B17/00—Franking apparatus
- G07B17/00459—Details relating to mailpieces in a franking system
- G07B17/00661—Sensing or measuring mailpieces
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q10/00—Administration; Management
- G06Q10/08—Logistics, e.g. warehousing, loading or distribution; Inventory or stock management
- G06Q10/083—Shipping
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
- G06Q—INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- G06Q30/00—Commerce
- G06Q30/018—Certifying business or products
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- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07B—TICKET-ISSUING APPARATUS; FARE-REGISTERING APPARATUS; FRANKING APPARATUS
- G07B17/00—Franking apparatus
- G07B17/00185—Details internally of apparatus in a franking system, e.g. franking machine at customer or apparatus at post office
- G07B17/00435—Details specific to central, non-customer apparatus, e.g. servers at post office or vendor
- G07B2017/00443—Verification of mailpieces, e.g. by checking databases
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- G—PHYSICS
- G07—CHECKING-DEVICES
- G07B—TICKET-ISSUING APPARATUS; FARE-REGISTERING APPARATUS; FRANKING APPARATUS
- G07B17/00—Franking apparatus
- G07B17/00459—Details relating to mailpieces in a franking system
- G07B17/00661—Sensing or measuring mailpieces
- G07B2017/00709—Scanning mailpieces
Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to information or data verification systems. More specifically, the present invention relates to the physical verification of matching associations between information or data contained on separate printed articles.
- Mail inserting systems currently can insert a specific customer's materials into an envelope and then print the customer's address on the outside of the envelope.
- software errors as well as other errors do occur nonetheless, and in some cases the wrong customer's name, for instance, is printed on the envelope.
- Operators of processing equipment can of course tear a mail piece open to sample the process being implemented, but this action destroys the mail piece and does not catch errors in mail pieces not opened in this manner.
- the present invention is provided to solve these and other problems associated with the prior technology.
- the present invention provides an apparatus and method for physically verifying that the enclosed contents of a mail piece or other enclosure correctly match the printed address or other information on the mail piece.
- the present invention has particular application to closed faced addressing.
- the verification provided by the present invention is advantageously implemented in mail inserting systems, but will be understood as not being limited to such systems.
- a method for physically verifying a correct association between information printed on a closed face package and material and/or information contained inside the closed face package.
- a closed face package is provided which includes a document inserted within the package. The package has a window permitting a portion of the document to be read from a location outside of the package.
- One or more reading devices such as optical scanners is provided.
- a first reading device is employed to read data printed on the package and a second reading device is employed to read document data, the document data having been printed on the inserted document and appearing through the window of the package.
- a data file is read to access account information stored therein corresponding to the document data.
- At least a portion of the accessed account information is compared with the package data to determine whether a matching association exists between the package data and the document data. If the matching association is determined to exist, the package is allowed to be further processed. If the matching association is determined not to exist, the package is prevented from being further processed.
- a system for physically verifying a correct association between information printed on a closed face package and material and/or information contained inside the closed face package.
- the system comprises a storage medium, an electronic processing apparatus, and one or more optical readers.
- the storage medium contains a data file which includes account information specific to a mail recipient.
- the electronic processing apparatus is adapted to access the data file and retrieve data forming a part of the account information.
- the optical reader is adapted to read data printed on a closed face package.
- the closed face package contains a document or other article, and includes a window through which the document is visible.
- the optical reader is further adapted to read document data printed on the document and visible through the window of the closed face package, and to send the package data and the document data to the electronic processing apparatus.
- a mailpiece processing system comprising a mailpiece processing apparatus, a storage medium, an electronic processing apparatus, and one or more optical readers.
- the mailpiece processing apparatus includes a mail inserting device for inserting a document into a closed face package and a package printer for printing package data onto the closed face package.
- the storage medium contains a data file which includes account information specific to a mail recipient.
- the electronic processing apparatus is adapted to control operations of the mailpiece processing apparatus and to access the data file and retrieve data forming a part of the account information.
- the optical reader adapted to read data printed on the closed face package.
- the closed face package contains the document inserted by the mail inserting device and includes a window through which the document is visible.
- the optical reader is further adapted to read document data printed on the document and visible through the window of the closed face package, and to send the package data and the document data to the electronic processing apparatus.
- a computer program product is adapted for physically verifying a correct association between information printed on a closed face package and material and/or information contained inside the closed face package.
- the closed face package includes a document inserted within the package, and the package has a window permitting a portion of the document to be read from a location outside of the package.
- the computer program product comprises computer-executable instructions embodied in a computer-readable medium for performing steps comprising the following.
- Package data is received.
- the package data is printed on the closed face package and read from the package by a first reading device.
- Document data is also received.
- the document data is printed on the inserted document and appears through the window of the package.
- a data file is read to access account information stored therein corresponding to the document data. At least a portion of the accessed account information is compared with the package data to determine whether a matching association exists between the package data and the document data. If the matching association is determined to exist, the package is allowed to be further processed. If the matching association is determined not to exist, the package is prevented from being further processed.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a mail processing system in which the present invention can be implemented
- FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of a mail inserting apparatus in which the present invention can be implemented
- FIG. 3 is a flow diagram illustrating verification procedures carried out according to the present invention.
- FIGS. 4A and 4B are plan views of the front and rear faces, respectively, of an envelope utilized in accordance with the present invention.
- mail processing system 10 can be characterized as a closed loop solution which connects a host system or network 12 to the mailroom floor and provides custom processing information and real-time mailpiece tracking for each mailpiece.
- mailpiece generally refers to an assembled, predetermined, inserted document or documents, together with any inserts.
- the operator of equipment included within mail processing systems such as mail processing system 10 can track and control the handling of individual mailpieces throughout the inserter operations through the use of a conventional job tracking system equipped with photocell devices or similarly functioning devices, thereby increasing mailing integrity to some degree.
- Missing or damaged mailpieces or elements thereof, as well as duplicates, can be automatically detected, and reprints can be generated accordingly.
- a manifest can be automatically generated that is based on the actual mail produced, and not just what was originally planned to be produced.
- Mail processing system 10 as exemplified herein preferably operates in conjunction with a data file containing the instructions for the handling of each mailpiece, which data file typically is stored in a database residing on a database server 14 . On-document barcode is thus minimized since all of the customer-specific information can be stored in the database instead of having to be scanned off the printed document. Additionally, inserts can be automatically and selectively fed into a mailpiece if instructions for doing so are contained in the data file. As is known by those skilled in the art, an “insert” ordinarily constitutes a single paper or card that is to be included as a supplementary item in a mailpiece.
- a typical architecture for mail processing system 10 includes a supervisor computing device such as a supervisor PC 16 , which provides a central terminal for monitoring networked mail processing machinery and serves as a gateway to database server 14 .
- Supervisor PC 16 executes a supervisor program which supports the loading and unloading of data files, preand post-processing pull features, and the generation of combined reports as well as reprint files.
- the supervisor program can also be used to manage users, create job set-ups and corresponding materials, generate historical reports and manifests, and perform database maintenance and site configuration.
- Inserter 20 is the machine that physically delivers sets of pre-printed sheets or documents from upstream devices and adds selected inserts. Each document is then placed into an envelope. Each envelope is sealed and sorted by predetermined characteristics configured on supervisor PC 16 .
- Database server 14 is provided to serve as the database computer to provide and retrieve processing information for each mail processing machine such as inserter 20 .
- Supervisor PC 16 is utilized to transfer data from the data file to and from database server 14 . For instance, job processing instructions can be set up at supervisor PC 16 and maintained on database server 14 , and then made available to inserter 20 which processes the job.
- a console 22 with its operative software applications serves as the user interface to inserter 20 via a machine control computer 24 .
- Operators of inserter 20 can use console 22 to run job setups created by the supervisor program on supervisor PC 16 . These jobs inform inserter 20 as to the layout of the document, the type of fold to use, the numbers corresponding to the insert hoppers which contain the inserts, what kind of addressing is needed, and how to handle the completed envelope. Operator, shift and job activity as well as operator and inserter efficiency on console 22 can be tracked by the supervisor program.
- Machine control computer 24 serves as the interface between console 22 and inserter 20 .
- the machine control is an embedded control system that directly controls the motors of inserter 20 . Typically, there is no operator interaction with machine control computer 24 .
- the various computers utilized in a mail processing system such as that described herein are networked to each other via cabling as needed.
- exemplary mail inserter 20 is illustrated in more detail. It should be noted that mail inserters in general can include a number of different types of components and stations known to those skilled in the art, depending on the types of mail processing jobs and operations contemplated. FIG. 2 illustrates some examples. Accordingly, a front section 30 of inserter 20 includes components for implementing such operations as loading, accumulating, folding and collating documents. A series of insert hoppers 32 are included for adding inserts as demanded by the particular job being run. During the creation of a data file, data relating to each insert and its location in insert hoppers 32 are specified.
- a stuffing or inserting station 35 includes an envelope hopper 37 and other components necessary for stuffing or inserting the related set of documents and inserts into an envelope or other type of mail package.
- An envelope printer 39 for ink jet addressing, for example, is situated downstream of stuffing station 35 , as well as a special handling station 41 , reject bin 43 , and a final destination conveyor 45 .
- Envelope printer 39 is employed in cases where the envelope to be used does not have a see-through window displaying the address.
- a barcode or other control indication printed on a control document of the document set is read off the control document in step 61 , typically at a front end location of inserter 20 , and the corresponding document identification data is extracted or retrieved from the database.
- the data ordinarily include the final destination of the mailpiece and instructions as to which inserts, if any, to include.
- These processing instructions are passed on to inserter 20 in real time and the job is completed according to the mail-run instructions contained in the data file.
- the barcode need only contain the document ID and the rest of the mailpiece data can be stored in the database.
- the system sends a data request signal to extract the corresponding address data from the data file.
- the address data are sent to envelope printer 39 , and envelope printer 39 is instructed to print the extracted address data onto the stuffed envelope when the envelope has been properly positioned under the print head.
- the data file contains other information that should be printed on the envelope, that information is printed as well.
- envelope printer 39 can send a signal to machine control computer 24 to indicate that envelope printer 39 has printed the address data on the envelope. This signal can be sent in response to an inquiry made by the system software in step 63 in FIG. 3. If envelope printer 39 indicates that it has printed an address, then machine control computer 24 permits the envelope to be further processed and mailed. If no signal is sent by envelope printer 39 indicating that address data has been printed at the point in time when envelope printer 39 is queried, then a step 65 is taken to ensure that this particular envelope is rejected and not mailed. This procedure, however, is not sufficient for obtaining a verification that the contents of the envelope actually match data printed on the envelope. As described hereinabove, the conventional manner for physically verifying mailpieces involves randomly pulling a stuffed envelope off-line and tearing the envelope open to manually determine whether the mailpiece comprising one or more documents and inserts matches information printed on the envelope by envelope printer 39 .
- a complete physical verification is implemented by effecting an optical verification procedure at an optical verification site 47 disposed downstream of envelope printer 39 (see FIG. 2).
- the optical verification procedure is controlled and executed by system software.
- One or more optical scanners or readers (not specifically shown), but preferably two readers, are operatively mounted at optical verification site 47 , and are adapted to read symbologies or characters sets such as those commonly known as Data Matrix, Data Glyph, Bar Code 39, OCR, Post Net barcode, Planet Code, Interleaved 2 of 5, and PDF 417.
- the optical scanner is an OCR reader available from Cognex Corporation and designated as Model No. 8110.
- FIGS. 4A and 4B The optical verification procedure is carried out with the use of mail packages such as envelope illustrated in FIGS. 4A and 4B, generally designated 100 .
- FIG. 4A illustrates a front face 102 of envelope 100
- FIG. 4B illustrates a rear face 104 of envelope 100 .
- address data 106 has been sprayed by envelope printer 39 pursuant to instructions contained in the data file.
- package data 111 obtained from the data file, and in a symbological or characteristic format such as those delineated hereinabove, has also been sprayed onto front face 102 by envelope printer 39 .
- Rear face 104 of envelope 100 includes a window 113 which could be open or protected by a translucent layer such as a plastic film.
- a control document 115 forming a part of the mail articles comprising this particular mailpiece is visible through window 113 .
- Document data 117 specific to the data file for this mailpiece has been printed on control document 115 , again in a symbological or characteristic format such as those delineated hereinabove.
- the verification software associated with mail processing system 10 according to the present invention is configured such that document data 117 will be visible through window 113 . That is, the articles to be included with the mailpiece are collated, folded and inserted such that control document 115 resides directly adjacent to the inside surface of rear face 104 of envelope 100 , and document data 117 is printed at a specific location on control document 115 according to the predetermined location of window 113 .
- package data 111 has been printed on front face 102 of envelope 100 and window 113 of envelope 100 is disposed on rear face 104 . It will be understood, however, that package data 111 could be printed on either front face 102 or rear face 104 of envelope 100 , window 113 could be provided on either front face 102 or rear face 104 , and package data 111 and window 113 could be disposed either on the same face 102 or 104 of envelope or on opposing faces 102 and 104 . It will be further noted that the respective symbologies comprising package data 111 and document data 117 do not need to be the same. As a result, one of the optical readers provided in accordance with the present invention can be adapted to read one type of symbology while another optical reader provided can be adapted to read another type of symbology.
- the verification process according to the present invention is broadly represented by steps 71 - 79 , and it will be understood that this process can be implemented with or without steps 61 - 65 described hereinabove.
- Address data 106 and package data 111 based on account information acquired in step 61 are sprayed on envelope 100 by envelope printer 39 .
- envelope 100 is carried forward to optical verification site 47 .
- the optical readers are activated in step 71 .
- the first optical reader reads package data 111 off either front face 102 or rear face 104 of envelope 100
- the second optical reader reads document data 117 through window 113 (which is located on either front face 102 or rear face 104 of envelope 100 ).
- the data read by the optical readers is sent to machine control 24 , where the software verifies in step 73 whether both package data 111 and document data 117 match corresponding account information contained in the targeted data file stored on database server 14 . If the match is verified, envelope 100 is allowed to be further processed in step 75 . If the match fails to be verified, an error message is displayed in step 77 at machine control console 22 and inserter 20 is rendered inoperable in step 79 . Further measures can also be taken in step 79 , such as the activation of an alarm or the automatic contacting of engineering personnel.
- the orientation of the optical readers can be either “east-to-west” or “north-to-south”, and that the orientation of each optical reader can be the same or different from that of the other.
- package data 111 has been sprayed along an east-to-west line (see FIG. 4A) and document data 117 appears along a north-to-south line, which requires that one of the optical readers operate along the east-to-west orientation while the other optical reader operate along the north-to-south orientation.
- the optical readers are adjustably mounted or otherwise adapted to read in either the east-to-west or north-to-south directions as desired by the user. In this manner, the printing process itself does not need to be modified from job to job. It is contemplated by the present invention that a single optical reader could be developed for reading both package data 111 and document data 117 , thus eliminating the need for providing more than one optical reader.
- the present invention provides a novel solution for physically verifying on a real-time basis that the enclosed contents of a mail piece or other enclosure actually and correctly match the printed address or other information on the mail piece.
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Abstract
Description
- The present invention relates generally to information or data verification systems. More specifically, the present invention relates to the physical verification of matching associations between information or data contained on separate printed articles.
- Mail inserting systems currently can insert a specific customer's materials into an envelope and then print the customer's address on the outside of the envelope. However, as is well known to persons skilled in the art, software errors as well as other errors do occur nonetheless, and in some cases the wrong customer's name, for instance, is printed on the envelope. Operators of processing equipment can of course tear a mail piece open to sample the process being implemented, but this action destroys the mail piece and does not catch errors in mail pieces not opened in this manner.
- Prior to the present invention, it is believed that there was no known automated process by which to prove that a matching of information between the face of an enclosure and its contents were in fact correct. Moreover, there has not been an adequate means of catching the problem upon its occurrence and subsequently stopping the processing until the situation could be resolved. Accordingly, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the ability to provide such automated error detection and prevention would be a significant improvement over existing technology.
- The present invention is provided to solve these and other problems associated with the prior technology.
- Broadly stated, the present invention provides an apparatus and method for physically verifying that the enclosed contents of a mail piece or other enclosure correctly match the printed address or other information on the mail piece. The present invention has particular application to closed faced addressing. The verification provided by the present invention is advantageously implemented in mail inserting systems, but will be understood as not being limited to such systems.
- According to one embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for physically verifying a correct association between information printed on a closed face package and material and/or information contained inside the closed face package. A closed face package is provided which includes a document inserted within the package. The package has a window permitting a portion of the document to be read from a location outside of the package. One or more reading devices such as optical scanners is provided. In a specific embodiment, a first reading device is employed to read data printed on the package and a second reading device is employed to read document data, the document data having been printed on the inserted document and appearing through the window of the package. A data file is read to access account information stored therein corresponding to the document data. At least a portion of the accessed account information is compared with the package data to determine whether a matching association exists between the package data and the document data. If the matching association is determined to exist, the package is allowed to be further processed. If the matching association is determined not to exist, the package is prevented from being further processed.
- According to another embodiment of the present invention, a system is provided for physically verifying a correct association between information printed on a closed face package and material and/or information contained inside the closed face package. The system comprises a storage medium, an electronic processing apparatus, and one or more optical readers. The storage medium contains a data file which includes account information specific to a mail recipient. The electronic processing apparatus is adapted to access the data file and retrieve data forming a part of the account information. The optical reader is adapted to read data printed on a closed face package. The closed face package contains a document or other article, and includes a window through which the document is visible. The optical reader is further adapted to read document data printed on the document and visible through the window of the closed face package, and to send the package data and the document data to the electronic processing apparatus.
- According to yet another embodiment of the present invention, a mailpiece processing system is provided comprising a mailpiece processing apparatus, a storage medium, an electronic processing apparatus, and one or more optical readers. The mailpiece processing apparatus includes a mail inserting device for inserting a document into a closed face package and a package printer for printing package data onto the closed face package. The storage medium contains a data file which includes account information specific to a mail recipient. The electronic processing apparatus is adapted to control operations of the mailpiece processing apparatus and to access the data file and retrieve data forming a part of the account information. The optical reader adapted to read data printed on the closed face package. The closed face package contains the document inserted by the mail inserting device and includes a window through which the document is visible. The optical reader is further adapted to read document data printed on the document and visible through the window of the closed face package, and to send the package data and the document data to the electronic processing apparatus.
- According to a further embodiment of the present invention, a computer program product is adapted for physically verifying a correct association between information printed on a closed face package and material and/or information contained inside the closed face package. The closed face package includes a document inserted within the package, and the package has a window permitting a portion of the document to be read from a location outside of the package. The computer program product comprises computer-executable instructions embodied in a computer-readable medium for performing steps comprising the following. Package data is received. The package data is printed on the closed face package and read from the package by a first reading device. Document data is also received. The document data is printed on the inserted document and appears through the window of the package. A data file is read to access account information stored therein corresponding to the document data. At least a portion of the accessed account information is compared with the package data to determine whether a matching association exists between the package data and the document data. If the matching association is determined to exist, the package is allowed to be further processed. If the matching association is determined not to exist, the package is prevented from being further processed.
- It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide real time verification that information printed on a closed face package corresponds to materials and information disposed inside the closed face package.
- Some of the objects of the invention having been stated hereinabove, other objects will become evident as the description proceeds when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings as best described hereinbelow.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a mail processing system in which the present invention can be implemented;
- FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of a mail inserting apparatus in which the present invention can be implemented;
- FIG. 3 is a flow diagram illustrating verification procedures carried out according to the present invention; and
- FIGS. 4A and 4B are plan views of the front and rear faces, respectively, of an envelope utilized in accordance with the present invention.
- Referring now to FIG. 1, a non-limiting example is illustrated of a document handling or mail processing system, generally designated10, in which the present invention can be implemented. In the present example,
mail processing system 10 can be characterized as a closed loop solution which connects a host system ornetwork 12 to the mailroom floor and provides custom processing information and real-time mailpiece tracking for each mailpiece. As used herein, the term “mailpiece” generally refers to an assembled, predetermined, inserted document or documents, together with any inserts. Typically, the operator of equipment included within mail processing systems such asmail processing system 10 can track and control the handling of individual mailpieces throughout the inserter operations through the use of a conventional job tracking system equipped with photocell devices or similarly functioning devices, thereby increasing mailing integrity to some degree. Missing or damaged mailpieces or elements thereof, as well as duplicates, can be automatically detected, and reprints can be generated accordingly. A manifest can be automatically generated that is based on the actual mail produced, and not just what was originally planned to be produced.Mail processing system 10 as exemplified herein preferably operates in conjunction with a data file containing the instructions for the handling of each mailpiece, which data file typically is stored in a database residing on adatabase server 14. On-document barcode is thus minimized since all of the customer-specific information can be stored in the database instead of having to be scanned off the printed document. Additionally, inserts can be automatically and selectively fed into a mailpiece if instructions for doing so are contained in the data file. As is known by those skilled in the art, an “insert” ordinarily constitutes a single paper or card that is to be included as a supplementary item in a mailpiece. - A typical architecture for
mail processing system 10 includes a supervisor computing device such as asupervisor PC 16, which provides a central terminal for monitoring networked mail processing machinery and serves as a gateway todatabase server 14.Supervisor PC 16 executes a supervisor program which supports the loading and unloading of data files, preand post-processing pull features, and the generation of combined reports as well as reprint files. The supervisor program can also be used to manage users, create job set-ups and corresponding materials, generate historical reports and manifests, and perform database maintenance and site configuration. - Also provided is mail insertion and processing equipment in the form of an inserter, generally designated20.
Inserter 20 is the machine that physically delivers sets of pre-printed sheets or documents from upstream devices and adds selected inserts. Each document is then placed into an envelope. Each envelope is sealed and sorted by predetermined characteristics configured onsupervisor PC 16.Database server 14 is provided to serve as the database computer to provide and retrieve processing information for each mail processing machine such asinserter 20.Supervisor PC 16 is utilized to transfer data from the data file to and fromdatabase server 14. For instance, job processing instructions can be set up atsupervisor PC 16 and maintained ondatabase server 14, and then made available toinserter 20 which processes the job. Aconsole 22 with its operative software applications serves as the user interface to inserter 20 via amachine control computer 24. Operators ofinserter 20 can useconsole 22 to run job setups created by the supervisor program onsupervisor PC 16. These jobs informinserter 20 as to the layout of the document, the type of fold to use, the numbers corresponding to the insert hoppers which contain the inserts, what kind of addressing is needed, and how to handle the completed envelope. Operator, shift and job activity as well as operator and inserter efficiency onconsole 22 can be tracked by the supervisor program.Machine control computer 24 serves as the interface betweenconsole 22 andinserter 20. The machine control is an embedded control system that directly controls the motors ofinserter 20. Typically, there is no operator interaction withmachine control computer 24. The various computers utilized in a mail processing system such as that described herein are networked to each other via cabling as needed. - Referring now to FIG. 2,
exemplary mail inserter 20 is illustrated in more detail. It should be noted that mail inserters in general can include a number of different types of components and stations known to those skilled in the art, depending on the types of mail processing jobs and operations contemplated. FIG. 2 illustrates some examples. Accordingly, afront section 30 ofinserter 20 includes components for implementing such operations as loading, accumulating, folding and collating documents. A series ofinsert hoppers 32 are included for adding inserts as demanded by the particular job being run. During the creation of a data file, data relating to each insert and its location ininsert hoppers 32 are specified. A stuffing or insertingstation 35 includes anenvelope hopper 37 and other components necessary for stuffing or inserting the related set of documents and inserts into an envelope or other type of mail package. Anenvelope printer 39 for ink jet addressing, for example, is situated downstream of stuffingstation 35, as well as aspecial handling station 41, rejectbin 43, and afinal destination conveyor 45.Envelope printer 39 is employed in cases where the envelope to be used does not have a see-through window displaying the address. - Referring to FIG. 3, a barcode or other control indication printed on a control document of the document set is read off the control document in
step 61, typically at a front end location ofinserter 20, and the corresponding document identification data is extracted or retrieved from the database. The data ordinarily include the final destination of the mailpiece and instructions as to which inserts, if any, to include. These processing instructions are passed on toinserter 20 in real time and the job is completed according to the mail-run instructions contained in the data file. As described previously, in this manner, the barcode need only contain the document ID and the rest of the mailpiece data can be stored in the database. When the envelope is stuffed with the appropriate documents and inserts and the stuffed envelope is transported toenvelope printer 39, the system sends a data request signal to extract the corresponding address data from the data file. The address data are sent toenvelope printer 39, andenvelope printer 39 is instructed to print the extracted address data onto the stuffed envelope when the envelope has been properly positioned under the print head. Similarly, if the data file contains other information that should be printed on the envelope, that information is printed as well. - As part of the job tracking capability of
mail processing system 10,envelope printer 39 can send a signal tomachine control computer 24 to indicate thatenvelope printer 39 has printed the address data on the envelope. This signal can be sent in response to an inquiry made by the system software instep 63 in FIG. 3. Ifenvelope printer 39 indicates that it has printed an address, thenmachine control computer 24 permits the envelope to be further processed and mailed. If no signal is sent byenvelope printer 39 indicating that address data has been printed at the point in time whenenvelope printer 39 is queried, then astep 65 is taken to ensure that this particular envelope is rejected and not mailed. This procedure, however, is not sufficient for obtaining a verification that the contents of the envelope actually match data printed on the envelope. As described hereinabove, the conventional manner for physically verifying mailpieces involves randomly pulling a stuffed envelope off-line and tearing the envelope open to manually determine whether the mailpiece comprising one or more documents and inserts matches information printed on the envelope byenvelope printer 39. - In accordance with the present invention, a complete physical verification is implemented by effecting an optical verification procedure at an
optical verification site 47 disposed downstream of envelope printer 39 (see FIG. 2). Preferably, the optical verification procedure is controlled and executed by system software. One or more optical scanners or readers (not specifically shown), but preferably two readers, are operatively mounted atoptical verification site 47, and are adapted to read symbologies or characters sets such as those commonly known as Data Matrix, Data Glyph,Bar Code 39, OCR, Post Net barcode, Planet Code, Interleaved 2 of 5, and PDF 417. In one embodiment, the optical scanner is an OCR reader available from Cognex Corporation and designated as Model No. 8110. The optical verification procedure is carried out with the use of mail packages such as envelope illustrated in FIGS. 4A and 4B, generally designated 100. FIG. 4A illustrates afront face 102 ofenvelope 100, and FIG. 4B illustrates arear face 104 ofenvelope 100. Onfront face 102,address data 106 has been sprayed byenvelope printer 39 pursuant to instructions contained in the data file. In addition,package data 111 obtained from the data file, and in a symbological or characteristic format such as those delineated hereinabove, has also been sprayed ontofront face 102 byenvelope printer 39. Rear face 104 ofenvelope 100 includes awindow 113 which could be open or protected by a translucent layer such as a plastic film. Acontrol document 115 forming a part of the mail articles comprising this particular mailpiece is visible throughwindow 113.Document data 117 specific to the data file for this mailpiece has been printed oncontrol document 115, again in a symbological or characteristic format such as those delineated hereinabove. The verification software associated withmail processing system 10 according to the present invention is configured such thatdocument data 117 will be visible throughwindow 113. That is, the articles to be included with the mailpiece are collated, folded and inserted such thatcontrol document 115 resides directly adjacent to the inside surface ofrear face 104 ofenvelope 100, anddocument data 117 is printed at a specific location oncontrol document 115 according to the predetermined location ofwindow 113. - In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 4A and 4B,
package data 111 has been printed onfront face 102 ofenvelope 100 andwindow 113 ofenvelope 100 is disposed onrear face 104. It will be understood, however, thatpackage data 111 could be printed on eitherfront face 102 orrear face 104 ofenvelope 100,window 113 could be provided on eitherfront face 102 orrear face 104, andpackage data 111 andwindow 113 could be disposed either on thesame face faces package data 111 and documentdata 117 do not need to be the same. As a result, one of the optical readers provided in accordance with the present invention can be adapted to read one type of symbology while another optical reader provided can be adapted to read another type of symbology. - Referring back to FIG. 3 with secondary reference being made to FIGS. 2, 4A and4B, the verification process according to the present invention is broadly represented by steps 71-79, and it will be understood that this process can be implemented with or without steps 61-65 described hereinabove.
Address data 106 andpackage data 111 based on account information acquired instep 61 are sprayed onenvelope 100 byenvelope printer 39. Assumingenvelope 100 is to be further processed and not rejected pursuant to step 65,envelope 100 is carried forward tooptical verification site 47. Atoptical verification site 47, the optical readers are activated instep 71. The first optical reader readspackage data 111 off eitherfront face 102 orrear face 104 ofenvelope 100, and the second optical reader readsdocument data 117 through window 113 (which is located on eitherfront face 102 orrear face 104 of envelope 100). The data read by the optical readers is sent tomachine control 24, where the software verifies instep 73 whether bothpackage data 111 and documentdata 117 match corresponding account information contained in the targeted data file stored ondatabase server 14. If the match is verified,envelope 100 is allowed to be further processed instep 75. If the match fails to be verified, an error message is displayed instep 77 atmachine control console 22 andinserter 20 is rendered inoperable instep 79. Further measures can also be taken instep 79, such as the activation of an alarm or the automatic contacting of engineering personnel. - It should be noted that the orientation of the optical readers can be either “east-to-west” or “north-to-south”, and that the orientation of each optical reader can be the same or different from that of the other. In the present example,
package data 111 has been sprayed along an east-to-west line (see FIG. 4A) anddocument data 117 appears along a north-to-south line, which requires that one of the optical readers operate along the east-to-west orientation while the other optical reader operate along the north-to-south orientation. Preferably, the optical readers are adjustably mounted or otherwise adapted to read in either the east-to-west or north-to-south directions as desired by the user. In this manner, the printing process itself does not need to be modified from job to job. It is contemplated by the present invention that a single optical reader could be developed for reading bothpackage data 111 anddocument data 117, thus eliminating the need for providing more than one optical reader. - It thus can be seen that the present invention provides a novel solution for physically verifying on a real-time basis that the enclosed contents of a mail piece or other enclosure actually and correctly match the printed address or other information on the mail piece.
- It will be understood that various details of the invention may be changed without departing from the scope of the invention. Furthermore, the foregoing description is for the purpose of illustration only, and not for the purpose of limitation—the invention being defined by the claims.
Claims (45)
Priority Applications (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US09/752,198 US7236935B2 (en) | 2000-12-29 | 2000-12-29 | Method and apparatus for verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
PCT/US2001/049200 WO2002054647A2 (en) | 2000-12-29 | 2001-12-18 | Verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
AU2002239653A AU2002239653A1 (en) | 2000-12-29 | 2001-12-18 | Verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US09/752,198 US7236935B2 (en) | 2000-12-29 | 2000-12-29 | Method and apparatus for verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
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US20020087338A1 true US20020087338A1 (en) | 2002-07-04 |
US7236935B2 US7236935B2 (en) | 2007-06-26 |
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US09/752,198 Expired - Lifetime US7236935B2 (en) | 2000-12-29 | 2000-12-29 | Method and apparatus for verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
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US (1) | US7236935B2 (en) |
AU (1) | AU2002239653A1 (en) |
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Cited By (7)
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WO2002054647A2 (en) * | 2000-12-29 | 2002-07-11 | Bell & Howell Mail And Messaging Technologies Company | Verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
WO2002082223A2 (en) * | 2001-04-05 | 2002-10-17 | Mastercard International Incorporated | Method and system for detecting incorrect merchant code used with payment card transaction |
US20050165704A1 (en) * | 2004-01-28 | 2005-07-28 | Technology Solutions International, Inc. | Method and apparatus for merging of bulk mailings |
US20070177764A1 (en) * | 2006-01-31 | 2007-08-02 | Harman James L | Reprint function for mailpiece inserters |
US20090018977A1 (en) * | 2007-07-10 | 2009-01-15 | Neopost Technologies | franking method having error correction |
US9142035B1 (en) * | 2013-03-05 | 2015-09-22 | Amazon Technologies, Inc. | Item dimension verification at packing |
US20180285688A1 (en) * | 2017-04-04 | 2018-10-04 | Canon Kabushiki Kaisha | Information processing apparatus and control method |
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US20110270681A1 (en) * | 2006-08-01 | 2011-11-03 | Zadspace, Inc. | System and method for targeted advertising on parcel packages |
US8738441B2 (en) * | 2006-06-12 | 2014-05-27 | Zadspace, Inc. | Parcel advertising system and method |
EP2293254B1 (en) * | 2009-09-04 | 2013-02-13 | Neopost Technologies | Automated mail inserting |
JP5751469B2 (en) * | 2010-11-26 | 2015-07-22 | 株式会社リコー | Encapsulation system |
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WO2002054647A2 (en) * | 2000-12-29 | 2002-07-11 | Bell & Howell Mail And Messaging Technologies Company | Verifying a match between contents of an enclosure and data printed on the enclosure |
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US20050165704A1 (en) * | 2004-01-28 | 2005-07-28 | Technology Solutions International, Inc. | Method and apparatus for merging of bulk mailings |
US20070177764A1 (en) * | 2006-01-31 | 2007-08-02 | Harman James L | Reprint function for mailpiece inserters |
US8049940B2 (en) * | 2006-01-31 | 2011-11-01 | Pitney Bowes Inc. | Reprint function for mailpiece inserters |
US20090018977A1 (en) * | 2007-07-10 | 2009-01-15 | Neopost Technologies | franking method having error correction |
US9142035B1 (en) * | 2013-03-05 | 2015-09-22 | Amazon Technologies, Inc. | Item dimension verification at packing |
US9818235B1 (en) | 2013-03-05 | 2017-11-14 | Amazon Technologies, Inc. | Item dimension verification at packing |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
WO2002054647A3 (en) | 2002-11-21 |
US7236935B2 (en) | 2007-06-26 |
WO2002054647A2 (en) | 2002-07-11 |
AU2002239653A1 (en) | 2002-07-16 |
WO2002054647A8 (en) | 2003-01-09 |
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